Scott Moritz of TheStreet.com has a knack for landing exclusive stories—Microsoft-branded phones, Verizon-based iPhones and more—but his track record isn't exactly the best based on what Technologizer found in their breakdown of these "exclusive" stories.

The story would seem to give new life to old rumors about a Microsoft phone, code-named project "Pink." Except…Scott Moritz stories headlined as"exclusives"–usually crediting Kumar for the scoop–have a crummy track record of exclusively revealing stuff that turns out to be true. When I see them, my instinctive response is skepticism, not bland acceptance of anything in the story as gospel.

The upshot: At January's CES show, announced it would sell Palm's Pre Plus and Pixi Plus, starting later that month. (Of course, it's conceivable that Verizon changed its mind, and if you want to get really technical, you might contend that the Pre Plus isn't a Pre.)

The upshot:The Google phone is real , and it almost shipped in 2009. Moritz's story says it will use a Qualcomm Snapdragon chip (correct) and speculates that it might be built by HTC (ditto). But it's sold direct by Google, not at retail–and it's offered with a rather non-disruptive T-Mobile contract.

The exclusive:Kumar says that the much-anticipated Apple tablet will use a chip from Apple's own PA Semi division,not an Intel CPU:

The upshot:Bingo! (Of course, the real surprise would have been if the iPhone-like iPad did use an Intel processor.)

The upshot: Less than a week later, Apple unveiled the iPad. Its 3G version will run on AT&T. I'm not sure if anyone who isn't involved with manufacturing of iPads knows for sure if there's any Qualcomm technology inside.

That's three exclusives that turned out to be completely or partially bogus, one that was correct, and two (counting the new Microsoft one) that may or may not amount to anything. Even if you assume that both the Qualcomm iPhone and Microsoft phone exclusives will pan out, chances would be fifty percent that Moritz was right, and fifty percent that he was wrong.